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Address
Durham
North Carolina
27710
United States
Organization
Administrator Details
Administrator Details
Clinical CMR Services
Clinical CMR Centers
- Adult Cardiologist
- Radiologist
- Pediatric Cardiologist
- Physicists
- Scientists
- 1.5T
- 3.0T
- Private hospital
- 2000 or more
- Chest pain / Stress CMR
- Heart failure
- Cardiomyopathy
- Myocarditis/COVID19
- Pericardial disease
- Valve disease
- Vascular disease including aorta
- Cardiac masses
- Congenital heart disease (children)
- Congenital heart disease (adult)
- Cardio-oncology
- Cardiac Transplant
- Cardiac Amyloid
- Cardiac Sarcoidosis
- Pericardial disease
- Other
Clinical CMR Training
CMR Clinical Training Centers
- Cardiology Fellowship
- Radiology Residency
- Pediatric Cardiology Fellowship
- Adult CMR training
- Pediatric/CHD training
- 1
- 2
- 3
- 1 month
- 3 months
- 6 months
- 1 year
- More than 1 year
- Funded positions
- Self-funded positions
- J-Visa
Contact Michele Parker: (michele.parker@duke.edu)
The DCMRC provides a twice-yearly practicum that provides the participant with an understanding of the principles of magnetic resonance imaging, safety issues in performing cardiac MR, and imaging protocols currently available for the evaluation of the structure and function of the cardiovascular system. Case presentations, one-on-one discussion, and observation of actual patient imaging will be emphasized. This course fulfills the SCMR requirements for Level 1 (Track B) and is applicable toward Level 2 certification and is aligned with the content for future CMR Board Exams.
See additional information at the following link: https://medicine.duke.edu/divisions/cardiology/patient-care/duke-cardiovascular-magnetic-resonance-center-dcmrc/education-and-training/dcmrc-educational-offerings/dcmrc-cardiovascular-mr-practicum
CMR Research Program
CMR Research Centers
DCMRC faculty have developed several advances in CMR, including, with Siemens scientists, the development of the Delayed Enhancement technique — arguably the single most important advance to propel CMR into widespread clinical use. Delayed Enhancement CMR detects injury to the heart and, crucially, can differentiate irreversible damage from damage that may recover with appropriate treatment. This knowledge provides essential guidance for many clinical decisions. Currently, our research interests are diverse and encompasses basic development of novel pulse sequences, work aimed at translating physiologic information into improved clinical care, and multi-center clinical trials.
For more details on prior research please visit our website at: https://medicine.duke.edu/divisions/cardiology/patient-care/duke-cardiovascular-magnetic-resonance-center-dcmrc/research
- 1.5T
- 3.0T
- Siemens
- Clinical CMR research (Adult)
- Clinical CMR research (Pediatric/CHD)
- Physics research
- Large animal research
- Myocardial perfusion
- Parametric mapping
- Flow imaging
- Post-processing
CMR Research Fellowships
CMR Research Fellowships
- Masters Degree
- Doctoral Degree
- Post-doctoral
- Self-funded positions
- J-Visa
Contact Michele Parker: (michele.parker@duke.edu)
Technologist CMR Training
CMR Technologist Training Centers
Contact Michele Parker: (michele.parker@duke.edu)
The DCMRC provides a twice-yearly practicum that provides the participant with an understanding of the principles of magnetic resonance imaging, safety issues in performing cardiac MR, and imaging protocols currently available for the evaluation of the structure and function of the cardiovascular system. For technologists, these course provide observation of actual patient imaging as well.
See additional information at the following link: https://medicine.duke.edu/divisions/cardiology/patient-care/duke-cardiovascular-magnetic-resonance-center-dcmrc/education-and-training/dcmrc-educational-offerings/dcmrc-cardiovascular-mr-practicum
Last Updated: August 12, 2024